Anyone know of any DVD's of tribe season's that has some good footage of Albert Belle's swing? Been digging around the Inter-tubes, and there really isn't much out there which surprises me. Wondering if anyone here knows of a good season recap DVD or something where I can see some more swings. I think I have about 6 gifs total and some are so small (cuts out pitcher in view etc.).

I got on ebay and searched '1995 Cleveland Indians DVD,' and it came up with two things; the ALCS and the World Series. It looks like they're complete game footage of all the games in the series.... that would be fun to watch.And it's funny you asked because I tried to use the exact same stance as ole Albert every single time I went to the plate, and it worked out pretty good for me.

Yea I was thinking of having one of the kids experiment with his setup, but damned if I can find clips. Recent hitters are easy you can just snag what you like of off m-l-b.com. Anyone who quit playing before say 2004 it's tough going. I'll poke around on E-bay, and look into the Wahoo what a finish.

My kid likes to stride to open kind of like Belle and Magglio, and he likes to get down into the leg a bit. Yesterday in the cage he was experimenting with keeping the bat vertical behind him while reading the pitch and he was just killing it, and I figured Belle would be the swing closest to that. Here are a couple:

^ best part of that video is not one other Brewer appears in view of the camera. They knew.

Galley Boys are slop on top of a so-so burger and a bun you coulde get from a Covneninet food mart generic pack. They the Antoine Joubert of burgers; soft, sloppy, oozing grease and cheap sauce and extremely overrated by a biased fan base. Proof that if you throw enough cheap sauce shit on a burger you still can't overcome the lame burger. -JB

watching that gif, Belle pulls his arms in and the ball still jomps off his bat

Galley Boys are slop on top of a so-so burger and a bun you coulde get from a Covneninet food mart generic pack. They the Antoine Joubert of burgers; soft, sloppy, oozing grease and cheap sauce and extremely overrated by a biased fan base. Proof that if you throw enough cheap sauce shit on a burger you still can't overcome the lame burger. -JB

When I was up in Cleveland in '07, I bought a red dvd box that contained every dvd from every c'ship season and also '94 and '00. Plenty of Belle in those.

Neal Heaton has the biggest set of balls in the world. He intentionally threw at Belle twice back in '92. He admitted after the game that he did. He actually dodged a huge Belle left hook at the mound, too. Same night, Dennis Cook gets thrown down by Royals bench coach Lee May.

Aside from that, you never f*cked with Belle or Big Hurt. That was a rule. Throw at Junior or even Big Mac. NOT those two. And who for those Brewers would have even had a chance? Jeff Juden?

Where these are lacking (I have a couple others) is that you don't see the pitcher as to how he timed his movements, so I am finally back from the 11 day baseball trip, I'll start checking tomorrow.

A couple other gifs I have if you aren't already aware you can download these and if you open in Quicktime you can use the arrow keys to go back and forth frame by frame. The one on the right is pretty cool because it shows the powerful position he is in at launch time. Front hip kind of cleared, shoulders still in, back hip still loaded. By loaded I just mean even though the foot is getting down the weight didn't shift until the swing starts. I haven't looked at spray charts but I seem to recall he hit quite a HRs and Doubles oppo but since I was living away in Texas at the time I didn't get to see nightly, was that the case? Just a sweet ass swing, maybe not to Manny's perfection but damn close.

Funny in that Belle's swing is a lot Belle himself: violence that's just being controlled and utilized for a common good. Most of the time.

Belle was far more Center to Left hitter. Occasionally he'd hit a ball out to right up the alley in RCF but mostly center and left. Ramirez consistently went opposite way and the thermometer for how hot Thome was at any given time was whether he was driving the ball to LF.

Jeez...think back on those three today and...wow. Ridiculously prodigious a productive Hall of Fame-caliber hitters.

Yea I was thinking of having one of the kids experiment with his setup, but damned if I can find clips. Recent hitters are easy you can just snag what you like of off m-l-b.com. Anyone who quit playing before say 2004 it's tough going. I'll poke around on E-bay, and look into the Wahoo what a finish.

My kid likes to stride to open kind of like Belle and Magglio, and he likes to get down into the leg a bit. Yesterday in the cage he was experimenting with keeping the bat vertical behind him while reading the pitch and he was just killing it, and I figured Belle would be the swing closest to that. Here are a couple:

His stance and swing are a spot on match for Paste on NJ in the original Bases Loaded for Nintendo.

"All Beckett needs to do to cap off this mess is order some fried chicken and beer" – 5/10/12 before Beckett got chased in the 3rd at Fenway.

peeker643 wrote:Funny in that Belle's swing is a lot Belle himself: violence that's just being controlled and utilized for a common good. Most of the time.

Belle was far more Center to Left hitter. Occasionally he'd hit a ball out to right up the alley in RCF but mostly center and left. Ramirez consistently went opposite way and the thermometer for how hot Thome was at any given time was whether he was driving the ball to LF.

Jeez...think back on those three today and...wow. Ridiculously prodigious a productive Hall of Fame-caliber hitters.

Check out the 1995 lineup and cry a little, just to remind yourselves how much offense that team had. It was truly a lineup pitchers had to hate to face.